Fly Fishing, first published in 1899 by English author and diplomat Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon (1862–1933), is a book about fly fishing English chalk streams and spate rivers for trout and salmon. It includes reminisces about the author's fly fishing experiences on Hampshire rivers. The book was in print for nearly 50 years and has been extensively reprinted in the 21st century.
Synopsis
The work deals with fly fishing for trout, sea trout and salmon. Grey places presents fishing for sea trout as the pinnacle of fly fishing and describes the challenge of fly fishing for Atlantic salmon. On trout, he was the first writer of importance on the dry-fly who really knew what the wet-fly meant. Grey was an expert angler and he detailed much that is useful and instructive in prose that is clear and vigorous.
What are the qualities which a man most needs to become a good angler? Let us assume that he starts with keenness, that the prospect of hooking a fish produces in him that feeling of excitement which is the motive for a desire to succeed, is the beginning of delight in angling, and, like a first element, cannot be analysed. ...In angling, as in all other recreations into which excitement enters, we have to be upon our guard, so that we can at any moment throw a weight of self-control into the scale against misfortune, and happily we can study to some purpose, both to increase our pleasure in success and to lessen the distress caused by what goes ill.
Grey was a contemporary of angler G. E. M. Skues at Winchester College, but it is unknown whether or not the two ever met or fished together while attending school.[1] At the time of his writing Fly Fishing, Grey was considered one of the finest dry fly fisherman in England and a master of the Hampshirechalkstreams.[2]
Contents
From 1st edition:
Chapter I – Introductory
Chapter II – Dry Fly Fishing
Chapter III – Dry Fly Fishing (continued)
Chapter IV – Winchester
Chapter V – Trout Fishing With The Wet Fly
Chapter VI – Sea Trout Fishing
Chapter VII – Salmon Fishing
Chapter VIII – Tackle All
Chapter IX – Experiments In Stocking
Chapter X – Some Memories Of Early Days
Index
List of illustrations
The Haunt of the Trout, from a drawing by Jessie MacGregor – Frontispiece
Hampshire Water Meadow, from a drawing by Jessie MacGregor
Dry Flies and Wet Flies
Winchester Cathedral, from a drawing by William Hyde
St. Catherine's Hill, Winchester, from a drawing by William Hyde
Where Sea Trout Run, from a drawing by Jessie MacGregor
Salmon and Sea Trout Flies
A Northumberland Burn, from a drawing by Jessie MacGregor
(The two plates of flies have been copied from specimens supplied by Messrs. Hardy of Alnwick)
Reviews
The London Times, in noting the first edition of Fly Fishing, stated:
Sir Edward Grey is celebrated as one of the very best dry-fly fishers of the age. ... His book on fly fishing is certainly one of the best of the many in which the time abounds. It is not too technical ... A just medium is hit on, and no more agreeable book can solace the angler while he waits (and a long wait it usually is) for the rise.
Lord Grey of Fallodon published his book at the end of last century. The dry fly was then at its zenith, and the other system [the nymph] was receiving somewhat intolerant treatment. He was the first writer of importance on the dry fly who really knew what the wet fly meant. Himself the best and most devoted dry fly fisherman in England, he thus started unconsciously that restatement of values which Mr. Skues has carried so far. But he did more. He is gifted with the power to write fine prose.
— John Waller Hills, A History of Fly Fishing for Trout (1921)[4]
James Robb, in Notable Angling Literature (1945) ranks Grey's Fly Fishing very highly:
There are not many who have acquired angling fame by the publication of only one book. There are few, however: those who readily occur to one are Walton, Stewart, Scrope and Plunket Greene. To that select circle there must be added the name of Edward Grey, for Fly-fishing was his one angling book and it is ranked among the classics. Indeed some go so far as to regard it as the finest contribution that has ever been made.
— James Robb, Notable Angling Literature (1945)[5]
Herd, Andrew Dr (2001). The Fly. Ellesmere, Shropshire: Medlar Press. ISBN1899600191.
Hayter, Tony (2002). F.M. Halford and the Dry-Fly Revolution. London: Rober Hale. ISBN0709067739.
Halford, F. M. (2007). Schullery, Paul (ed.). Halford on the Dry Fly. Mechanicsburg, Pa: Stackpole Books. ISBN9780811702720.
Black, William C. (2010). Gentlemen Preferred Dry Flies--The Dry Fly and The Nymph, Evolution and Conflict. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN9780826347954.
^Black, William C. (2010). "G.E.M.Skues Picks up the Gauntlet". Gentlemen Preferred Dry Flies—The Dry Fly and The Nymph, Evolution and Conflict. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press. pp. 101–102. ISBN9780826347954.
^ abCallahan, Ken; Morgan, Paul (2008). Hampton's Angling Bibliography-Fishing Book 1881-1849. Ellesmere, England: The Medlar Press Ltd. p. 121. ISBN9781899600878.
^"Sir Edward Grey on Fly Fishing," The Times (London), 24 April 1899, p. 5.